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Eosinophil cationic protein (ECP)

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Marker of Eosinophil Activation – Allergy, Asthma, Atopy & Eosinophilic Inflammation)

Synonyms

  • ECP
  • Eosinophil cationic protein
  • Ribonuclease 3 (RNase 3)
  • Eosinophil granule protein
  • Eosinophil-derived cytotoxic protein

Units of Measurement

  • ng/mL
  • ng/dL
  • ng/100 mL
  • ng%
  • ng/L
  • µg/L

1 ng/mL = 1 µg/L
1 ng/mL = 100 ng/dL
ng/100 mL = ng% = ng/dL

Description

Eosinophil Cationic Protein (ECP) is a toxic ribonuclease released from activated eosinophils.
It plays a major role in:

  • Allergic inflammation
  • Asthma airway hyperresponsiveness
  • Tissue damage in eosinophil-mediated diseases

ECP measurement reflects eosinophil activation, not merely eosinophil count.
Therefore, ECP is a functional marker rather than a simple cell count indicator.

Physiological Role

ECP participates in:

  • Antiparasitic activity
  • Tissue remodeling
  • Modulation of mast cells and T-cells
  • Bronchial hyperreactivity
  • Cytotoxicity in allergic airway inflammation

Released during:

  • Degranulation
  • Immune activation
  • Allergic responses

Clinical Significance

Elevated ECP (Most Important)

1. Bronchial Asthma

  • High ECP indicates airway inflammation
  • Correlates with:
    • Disease severity
    • Nocturnal symptoms
    • Airway hyperreactivity
    • Exacerbations

Used for:

  • Monitoring therapy response
  • Guiding inhaled corticosteroid titration

2. Allergic Diseases

Elevated in:

  • Allergic rhinitis
  • Atopic dermatitis
  • Eosinophilic esophagitis
  • Food allergies
  • Drug allergies

3. Parasitic Infections

Strongly elevated due to eosinophil activation.

4. Hypereosinophilic Syndromes (HES)

Helps evaluate disease activity along with eosinophil counts.

5. Autoimmune & Inflammatory Disorders

Moderate elevation in:

  • Eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis (EGPA)
  • Eosinophilic pneumonia

Low / Normal ECP

  • Normal eosinophil activation
  • Well-controlled asthma
  • Absence of significant allergic inflammation

Low ECP is not clinically concerning.

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E + EAACI + Mayo + ARUP)

Serum ECP

  • < 24 ng/mL (most common cutoff)
    Some labs use < 20–25 ng/mL.

Interpretation:

ECP LevelMeaning
< 20–24 ng/mLNormal
25–50 ng/mLMild eosinophil activation
50–100 ng/mLModerate activation
> 100 ng/mLHigh activation (asthma flare, HES)

In Atopic Dermatitis

Levels may exceed 200–300 ng/mL during flares.

In HES

May exceed 500 ng/mL.

Unit Meanings

UnitMeaning
ng/mLnanograms per milliliter
ng/dLnanograms per deciliter
ng/100 mL = ng%identical
ng/Lnanograms per liter
µg/Lmicrograms per liter

Diagnostic Uses

1. Asthma Diagnosis & Monitoring

  • Helps assess inflammatory phenotype
  • Higher sensitivity for eosinophilic inflammation than blood eosinophil count
  • Useful in corticosteroid titration

2. Atopic Dermatitis Severity

Correlates strongly with:

  • Eczema Area and Severity Index (EASI)
  • Itching intensity
  • Flare frequency

3. Eosinophilic Gastrointestinal Diseases

Useful in:

  • Eosinophilic esophagitis
  • Eosinophilic gastroenteritis

4. Hypereosinophilic Syndrome

Tracks disease activity and treatment response.

5. Parasitic Infections

Elevated ECP supports diagnosis in eosinophilia associated with helminths.

Analytical Notes

  • Serum preferred
  • Sample should be processed quickly (ECP released during clotting)
  • Collection tubes: avoid prolonged clotting
  • Immunoassay-based (ELISA, fluoroimmunoassays)
  • Diurnal variation minimal compared to eosinophil count
  • Not useful in acute anaphylaxis (transient changes)

Clinical Pearls

  • ECP reflects activation, not just number better for monitoring allergic inflammation.
  • ECP is one of the best biomarkers for asthma control and steroid responsiveness.
  • High ECP in atopic dermatitis correlates with barrier dysfunction.
  • ECP can identify eosinophilic phenotype when blood eosinophils are normal.
  • Rapid rise in ECP suggests upcoming asthma exacerbation even before symptoms.

Interesting Fact

ECP is highly cytotoxic - it can damage parasites, bacteria, epithelial cells, and even host tissues when excessively released in allergic diseases.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Immunology & Inflammatory Markers.
  2. EAACI Position Papers - Biomarkers in Asthma & Atopy.
  3. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - ECP.
  4. ARUP Consult - Eosinophilic Disorders.
  5. MedlinePlus / NIH — Allergy Laboratory Tests.

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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